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As the title suggests, the purpose of this thread is to discuss Guilty Crown Mecha, Weapons, and Technology

Please keep discussion about plot and storylines in the relevant Episode Discussion threads, not here. It's also a good idea that this thread discuss things that have shown up in the anime, manga or light novel - discussion of things that have only been announced should stay in the appropriate thread.

Note that because of the nature of this thread, there may be spoilers for non-anime Guilty Crown works. Please keep such spoilers to a minimum, and use well-titled spoiler tags whenever possible.

[spoiler=title]Don't forget to use a title to let everyone know what you're spoiling![/spoiler]

Spoiler for title:

Don't forget to use a title to let everyone know what you're spoiling!

Be polite to your fellow forum members and try and keep the discussion on topic and above all, enjoy.

While it's impressive since the pilot is safe within friendly lines I do not get why they feedback everything that the machine feels. When Gai was shooting Daryl's head he actually felt it. When Ayase was being beaten she also felt all of the punches like it was her own body.

Not that I can recall, which kind of makes this thread something of an unfortunate farce. Then again there hasn't been much in the way of detail about anything in this show. Some of the old school Super Robot animes probably went into more detail about how their tech works even if it was mostly stuff like "Getter Rays power evolution and are harmful to dinosaurs".

Also about the two types of them:
▼エンドレイヴ（デザインA）
ゲーム本編に登場予定のプロトタイプエンドレイヴ。
10年後のアニメ本編のエンドレイヴとは異なり、かなり大型のユニットで、重機の面影を色濃く残し ている。
▼エンドレイヴ（デザインB）
アニメ本編では旧型であるエンドレイヴ“ジュモウ”に似た形状のプロトタイプエンドレイヴ。
銃火器が装備されているが、軍用機体だろうか？

While it's impressive since the pilot is safe within friendly lines I do not get why they feedback everything that the machine feels. When Gai was shooting Daryl's head he actually felt it. When Ayase was being beaten she also felt all of the punches like it was her own body.

Doesn't seem to make sense to have a robot that fragile.

The way I see it, they are pretty much implanting the pilot's consciousness into the suit and controlling it by thought.

This would in a sense enable near endless array of movement with the pilot effectively moving the suit as if it was their own body.

They see through the senses of the suit and a price for that is that they share the frame's pain and are forcefully ejected when damage is too great to avoid excessive mental trauma.

By having the pilot safe behind the lines, you can simply put them into the next available unit. That way if a particular unit was given a special assignment and was taken out, they could simply swap the pilot out of the next immediately available frame and continue the mission.

It's very similar to how the Tau Crisis Suits are piloted in the WH40K universe. Except the pilot is really in the suit. And I can't remember the exact name for it but I recall reading some fluff stating that if a suit lost an arm in combat, the Shas would often feel as if they truly lost a limb and would often lead to excessive mental trauma. (PTSD)

Laugh now but I highly suspect this sort of Command and Control will be common place in the military of the future.

The way I see it, they are pretty much implanting the pilot's consciousness into the suit and controlling it by thought.

This would in a sense enable near endless array of movement with the pilot effectively moving the suit as if it was their own body.

They see through the senses of the suit and a price for that is that they share the frame's pain and are forcefully ejected when damage is too great to avoid excessive mental trauma.

By having the pilot safe behind the lines, you can simply put them into the next available unit. That way if a particular unit was given a special assignment and was taken out, they could simply swap the pilot out of the next immediately available frame and continue the mission.

It's very similar to how the Tau Crisis Suits are piloted in the WH40K universe. Except the pilot is really in the suit. And I can't remember the exact name for it but I recall reading some fluff stating that if a suit lost an arm in combat, the Shas would often feel as if they truly lost a limb and would often lead to excessive mental trauma. (PTSD)

Laugh now but I highly suspect this sort of Command and Control will be common place in the military of the future.

It's actually a forseeable evolution in controlling stuff in the future but rather than feel pain, it could be designed such that it's a sensation of numbness. Unless the feedback overwhelms any in-built safeties